Comal County, TX — July 26, 2025, Ryanne Valdez was injured in a single-car accident at about 4:30 p.m. on Mystic Breeze.
A preliminary accident report indicates that a 1998 Ford Explorer was headed southwest when it crashed into a ditch and overturned. It also damaged about 30 feet of fence and hit a tree.

Ford driver Ryanne Valdez, 28, was seriously injured in the crash, according to the report.
Authorities have not released any additional information about the crash north of Canyon Lake at this time.
Commentary by Attorney Michael Grossman
After a serious crash, there’s always more to the story than what’s first reported. The pieces we see in early accounts are just that, pieces, and they can leave big questions about how and why things unfolded. Those answers usually depend on how deep investigators are willing, and able, to dig.
Did the authorities thoroughly investigate the crash? A single-vehicle rollover can happen for many reasons, but figuring out which takes more than measuring skid marks and noting the final resting place of the car. The best crash investigations map the scene in detail, reconstruct vehicle movement and look into the driver’s condition and activity in the moments before impact. Not all investigators have the same training or tools, and sometimes the process stops at the basics, which can leave key facts undiscovered.
Has anyone looked into the possibility that a vehicle defect caused the crash? When an older SUV overturns, it’s worth asking if something inside the vehicle failed first. Brake problems, steering component wear or even a sudden suspension failure can cause a driver to lose control instantly. Those issues aren’t always visible from the outside: finding them means getting under the hood and checking each system carefully. Without that step, mechanical defects can quietly get written off as “driver error.”
Has all the electronic data relating to the crash been collected? Even a late-90s vehicle may have some data that can be pulled, and surrounding technology — like nearby traffic cameras or phone records — can help piece together what happened. Was there sudden braking? Did the speed spike unexpectedly? Was there a distraction? These details can turn speculation into certainty, but only if someone takes the time to track them down.
Asking these questions isn’t just an academic exercise; it’s how we move past guesswork. The more thorough the investigation, the closer we get to a clear picture of what really happened, and the less we rely on assumptions.
Key Takeaways:
- Early crash reports rarely tell the whole story.
- Vehicle defects can hide in plain sight without a full inspection.
- Electronic and digital data can answer questions that witness accounts can’t.